Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The covalent modification of receptor proteins via phosphorylation and dephosphorylation is one of the principal mechanisms controlling carbohydrate metabolism and is known to be regulated by various protein kinases. Recent studies indicated that many hormones may exert their effects on cellular metabolism by regulating intracellular c-AMP levels and by activating a c-AMP dependent protein kinase, i.e., protein kinase A. The metabolic disturbances during sepsis are characterized by an initial hyperglycemia followed by a progressive hypoglycemia and a depletion of hepatic glycogen content. The latter is coupled with a slowdown in glycogenesis, an accelerated glycogenolysis, and a depression in gluconeogenesis in the liver. Since the liver is the major organ that regulates the homeostatic level of blood glucose, it is conceivable that the sepsis-induced glucose dyshomeostasis might be mediated by changes in protein kinase activity and the kinetic characteristics of enzymes. The present experiment was designed to study the correlation between protein kinase A and the pathophysiology of hepatic glucose dyshomeostasis during sepsis. Sepsis was induced in rats by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). Late sepsis occurred 18 hours after CLP. Protein kinase A was extracted from the rat livers by acid precipitation and ammonium sulfate fractionation, and then partially purified by DEAE-cellulose. The results show that in the late sepsis, type-I protein kinase A (eluted at low ionic strength) activity was significantly decreased by 34-52% (P < 0.01). The kinetic parameters such as Vmax's for ATP, histone, and c-AMP were also significantly decreased from the control values of 6.1 +/- 0.9, 5.4 +/- 0.8, and 5.1 +/- 1.9 nmoles/mg.min. to 3.6 +/- 0.5, 2.8 +/- 0.3, and 2.5 +/- 0.5 nmoles/mg.min., respectively. Analysis using Hill's equation indicates that the S0.5 and n (Hill coefficient) values of the various substrates and activators for type-I protein kinase A remained unchanged. In the case of type-II protein kinase A (eluted at high ionic strength), the Vmax, S0.5, and n values for ATP, histone, and c-AMP were unchanged during late sepsis. The results of the present study indicate that the activities and kinetic characteristics of type I protein kinase A in rat liver are modified during late sepsis. Since protein kinase A is known to regulate glucose metabolism through adrenergic receptor mediation, these findings may have a pathophysiological significance in the understanding of hepatic glucose dyshomeostasis during sepsis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Kinetic studies of protein kinase A in rat liver during late sepsis]. 129 61

Syndrome of cholestasis is characterized by pronounced increase in concentration of the sulphur containing, ketogenic amino acids and intermediates of a cycle of urea formation in the blood plasma; sepsis--by decrease in pool of glycogenic amino acids, increase in concentration of free ammonium and reduction in correlation of amino acid concentration with branched hydrocarbon chain of aromatic amino acids. In cholestasis, the levels of ammonium alpha-amino butyrate and aromatic amino acids were the most informative indices, in sepsis--content of lysin, glutamate, cystein and cysteate.
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PMID:[Informative value of amino acid reserve in the blood plasma in cholestatic and septic syndrome]. 129 64

An extracellular toxin produced by Aeromonas hydrophila from cultured crucian carp with septicemia was detected. The toxin was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography and Sephadex G-100 gel filtration. The factor was a single polypeptide with a molecular weight of 52.5kd determined by SDS-PAGE. The heat-stable toxin possesses hemolytic, enterotoxic and cytolytic activities. The hemolytic activity on human erythrocytes was 3.81 x 10(3) HU/mg, CD50 for Vero cell was 0.26 microgram. The LD50 for crucian carp and mice was 4.44 micrograms and 3.58 micrograms respectively. The toxin was neutralized py homologous antibodies. The toxin shows unique characteristics as compared with other known bacterial toxins therefore the authors propose to name the toxin "hec" toxin.
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PMID:[Purification and characterization of hec toxin produced by Aeromonas hydrophila]. 129 32

The authors report about 12 cases of long ureteral calculi, 16 to 39 mm in size, observed over 10 years. They were all made of a mixture of ammonium-magnesium phosphate and calcium phosphocarbonate. Infection was the revealing symptom, either in the form of simple bacteriuria or as acute pyelonephritis or sepsis. These calculi, found in a lumbar or pelvic location, were very long, radiopaque but with a moderate radiological density, homogeneous and have regular contours. They were straight, sometimes slightly bent, rarely (one case out of 12) arciform. In 11 of 12 cases, the affected patient was female. In most cases, the urine was infected by Proteus mirabilis. In spite of their size, the calculi caused total obstruction in 3 of 12 cases only. They were or were not associated to ipsilateral coral calculi of the same chemical type. Destruction was easily achieved with physical agents. The etiological, radiological and therapeutic characteristics of these calculi give them a specific place among ammonium-magnesium phosphate calculi.
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PMID:[Long ureteral ammonium-magnesium phosphate (struvite) and calcium phospho-carbonate calculi]. 180 76

Vibrio anguillarum is a pathogenic marine bacterium which causes the disease vibriosis in salmonid fish, which is characterized by a fatal hemorrhagic septicemia accompanied by massive tissue destruction. In this paper, the purification of the major caseinolytic extracellular protease from V. anguillarum is presented. The purification steps include ammonium sulfate precipitation, DEAE-Sepharose chromatography, Sephacryl S-200 chromatography, and DEAE high-pressure liquid chromatography. The purified protease migrates with Mr = 38,000 upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A slightly larger protease of Mr 40,000 is also separated by this procedure, but accounts for only a minor fraction of the caseinolytic activity. The Mr 38,000 protease displays a broad pH activity profile in the neutral to basic range. It is not inhibited by serine, cysteine, or acid protease inhibitors, but is inhibited by EDTA and 1,10-phenanthroline, suggesting that it is a metalloprotease. The activity of the EDTA-inactivated protease could be partially restored by the addition of Ca2+ and Zn2+ together. The molecular weight and inhibition data show some similarities with proteases isolated from other Vibrio species such as Vibrio cholerae and Vibrio vulnificus.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a secreted protease from the pathogenic marine bacterium Vibrio anguillarum. 201 4

Eleven acute rejections were found in 9 patients with liver transplantation due to end-stage liver cirrhosis. The rejections were diagnosed with fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) giving the cellular picture of immunoactivation in the liver graft when compared to a simultaneous sample of peripheral blood. s-Alkaline phosphatase and s-bilirubin increased within 1 week after onset of rejection in 7 and 10 cases, respectively. s-Alanine amino-transferase and b-ammonium were of no value in the diagnosis of acute rejection. A core biopsy was obtained only in a case of severe liver damage, mainly to estimate the need for retransplantation. One year after grafting, 6 out of 7 cirrhotic patients are well, all with normal liver function. Two have died of sepsis. One patient died from pulmonary metastases of occult liver carcinoma 6 months after the transplantation. FNAB seems helpful in detecting early acute rejection and also excluding such an event in the liver graft.
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PMID:Diagnosis of acute rejection in liver transplantation. 304 94

The effect of inoculation with Escherichia coli on serum iron concentrations of turkeys and the effect of exogenous iron, as ferric ammonium citrate, on E coli septicemia in turkeys were determined. Inoculation of air sacs with E coli produced hypoferremia in 18-day-old turkeys. Administration of iron with E coli significantly (P less than 0.01) increased mortality, frequency and degree of bacteremia, and severity of lesions in inoculated turkeys, compared with those in turkeys given E coli but not given iron. Similar results were seen whether iron was inoculated at the same location as E coli or at a different location.
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PMID:Effects of exogenous iron on Escherichia coli septicemia of turkeys. 353 66

Intraabdominal sepsis in rats was induced as a sublethal infection (mortality rate of controls: 60%-80%) and as a lethal infection (mortality rate of controls: 100%). The effectivity of different immunoglobulin (IgG) preparations alone or together with an antibiotic combination therapy (gentamicin + piperacillin) was then tested. In sublethal infection, 5 intravenous administrations of three 7S-IgG preparations and a plasmin-treated preparation at a dosage of 0.5 g/kg b.w. were able to reduce lethality only slightly, whereas a 5S-IgG preparation was able to reduce lethality by 30% significantly. Intraperitoneal administration of two 7S-IgG preparations (s-sulfitolysis, 42 degrees C/ammonium sulfate) and the 5S-IgG preparation reduced lethality to 27%, 37% and 47%, respectively, whereas another 7S-IgG (iodoacetamide/dithiothreitol) and a plasmin-treated preparation failed to reduce lethality significantly. The convincing results obtained with the 5S-IgG preparation are probably due to the fact that Fc-mediated side-effects could be avoided. The better effectivity of intraperitoneal compared to intravenous administration can be explained by much higher concentrations of specific antibodies at the site of infection. In the lethal infection model the mortality of animals treated with antibiotics only was 50%. The additional intravenous administration of 7S-IgG (42 degrees C/ammonium sulfate), a plasmin-treated preparation and a 5S-IgG was unable to reduce mortality any further. These findings are in contrast to several publications which postulate synergism of antibiotics and immunoglobulins.
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PMID:[Effectiveness of various immunoglobulin preparations administered by the intravenous route in peritonitis in the rat model]. 358 20

A total of 209 strains of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from infections and 23 strains from nose cultures of healthy laboratory personnel were compared for relative surface hydrophobicity in the salt aggregation test (Lindahl et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 677:471-476, 1981). In the standard method, bacterial cell suspensions from blood agar-grown cultures were tested for visible aggregation by "salting out" in serial dilutions of ammonium sulfate (0.1 to 1.6 M [final concentration]). Bacteria were defined as extremely hydrophobic when showing autoaggregation in saline or in 0.002 M sodium phosphate buffer (pH 6.8). Using this definition, we found a large number of strains isolated from various infections to be very hydrophobic: 123 of 135 strains from patients with septicemia (91%), 54 of 60 strains from wound infections (90%), and 12 of 14 strains from urinary tract infections (86%). In contrast, only 9 of 23 strains from nose cultures of healthy carriers (39%) were autoaggregating. A total of 12 autoaggregating strains were grown on various solid and liquid media. Only growth on hematin agar was found to completely suppress surface hydrophobicity as revealed by our salt aggregation test method, and growth in liquid media prevented the expression of hydrophobicity in most strains. Growth at 20 or 42 degrees C or under anaerobic conditions did not affect hydrophobicity. Cells harvested from various phases of growth did not differ significantly in surface hydrophobicity. Heating washed cell suspensions at 56 degrees C did not affect the salt aggregation test values, whereas heating the cell suspensions at 80 and 100 degrees C caused a significant decline in hydrophobicity. The addition of ethylene glycol (25% [vol/vol] final concentration) prevented the autoaggregation of 10 of the 12 strains. Likewise, treating the cell suspensions with proteolytic enzymes decreased the surface hydrophobicity, indicating that surface proteins contribute to high surface hydrophobicity of autoaggregating strains.
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PMID:High surface hydrophobicity of autoaggregating Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from human infections studied with the salt aggregation test. 388 53

Four cases of Pseudomonas cepacia septicemia were found in one hospital in 1971. Two were related to severe phlebitis of the arms due to intravenous catheters, a third to an infected central venous pressure catheter. The infections resolved after the catheters were removed in these three cases. Prophylactic antibiotics may play a partial role in predisposing to this kind of infection. Ps. cepacia may be a more common pathogen than previously recognized. Its antibiotic sensitivity pattern distinguishes it from other members of the Pseudomonas family. Nosocomial infection with this bacteria has been traced to quaternary ammonium solutions but the source of infections in the present cases was not found.
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PMID:Pseudomonas cepacia septicemia associated with intravenous therapy. 449 88


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